Could someone please provide a transcription and translation of the last part of the sentence that begins with "Maria Rosa Cafarella"--the portion that begins with "al Archipresbytero." Are these the godparents' names that follow? Thanks very much.

First name of Cafarella is Liborio. Not sure the wife's first name is Assunta, but her surname looks like Ariano. I don't know about the abbreviation which follows that.

I am thinking that, after the parents' names, there might be the abbreviation for the word -coniuges -which means "married couple"

Here's a link that I found useful in trying to decipher some Latin records from one of my own ancestral towns. In that town, the relationships of the godparents to the child being baptized were often given.

Transcription of the last part of the document after the second part of the surname Napolitano -

nata die vero nona eiusdem

born this very day 9 the same (meaning the same month as previously given in the record)

I'm still trying to decipher the rest of the handwriting to give you an accurate transcription of the rest of the document. It's hard when you are rusty in the Latin language, but it's good practice for me.

First name of Cafarella is Liborio. Not sure the wife's first name is Assunta, but her surname looks like Ariano. I don't know about the abbreviation which follows that.

Thanks. The parents' names are Liborio Cafarella and Argenzia Suriano. The first name with Napolitano looks to me like it's spelled with a t--Lucretia.

The word following Archipresbytero is D'Arecca. A Giuseppe D'Arecca, sacerdote, shows up as a witness in Argenzia Suriano's death record a few years after this baptism. I just posted a question about archipresbytero versus sacerdote in another thread.